Just for a starter or restater
here's some really direct and intelligent Q and A info that seems to be called for at this point in this thread, and in these on-going discussions of Merion East's early history which I feel has become an excellent thread in the last 48+ hours or so with little to no contention and adversity amongst the participants (and I've actually discussed it with Ran Morrissett and he seems to agree, thankfully!)
To wit----and primarily from some statements on Post #589:
“1. HDC offered around 100 acres to MCC for a golf course."
That’s true. That was the initial offer HCC made to MCC and with that offer HDC included Barker’s ‘rough sketch’ of a course and his June 10, 1910 letter describing the potential of the property by Barker that was addressed not to MCC but to Connell of HDC. The MCC “Search Committee” report of June 29, 1910 to the MCC board also included the fact that Connell, not MCC, paid Barker for his services of June 1910. HH Barker’s letter to Connell was included in the MCC “Search Committee’s” report (June 29, 1910) to the board along with a description of Macdonald’s letter of June 29, 1910 to Lloyd c/o Drexel & Co. following Macdonald/Whigam’s visit to Ardmore at the invitation of R.E. Griscom that followed HH Barker’s visit to Ardmore. Therefore Macdonald/Whigam’s visit to Ardmore must have taken place at some point between app June 11 and maybe June 27, 1910. I should reiterate here and now that following the mention and inclusion of Barker’s letter (unfortunately not his ‘rough sketch’ he referred to in his letter to Connell) that was included in both the MCC “Search Committee” July, 29, 1910 report to the board as well as in the July 1, 1910 Special Board Meeting called solely to consider the new golf ground (Ardmore) Barker’s name was never again mentioned by MCC in any of its board, committee or administrative meetings.
“This must have consisted of the entire width of the Johnson Farm property below the southern border of the College property, extended.”
Why must this have consisted of the entire width of the Johnson Farm property below the southern border of the (Haverford) College property extended?? I presume by that statement you must mean southeastern corner of the Haverford College property extended directly west to the boundary of the old Johnson Farm and the Davis Farm that was contiguous to the entire western boundary of the Johnson Farm (from near Ardmore Ave on the south right to College Ave on the north) on the west at what is called “The top of the L”)?
“I say must because we know that the land above this wasn't originally on the table because Francis tells us so.”
Do we REALLY know this? Who ever said that back then as you stated it above? Show us where Richard Francis or anyone else ever said that or wrote that the ENTIRE northern block of the Johnson Farm adjacent to Haverford College’s and McFadden’s properties on the east and the border on the west (above a western line from Haverford College Land to Davis Farm land) was not on the table??
We do know that the MCC “Search Committee” in its report of June 29, 1910 did for the first time say that they believed they needed 120 acres for a good golf course following HDC’s initial offer of 100 acres that was offered at the time of and via Barker’s letter and ‘rough sketch’ but we do not know if MCC or HDC was actively looking at or pursuing the 20 acre Dallas Estate at that time. What we do know via an independent newspaper account in Aug 1910, even if apparently it was in estate probate at the time) that a Mr. Freeman contracted to buy the Dallas Estate property as his estate. And we also apparently know that back in the June, July, August, Sept and most of October timeframe that property was never mentioned by either HDC or MCC as far, as I know.
Was Freeman a strawman buyer for either HDC and Connell and/or for Lloyd who was MCC’s appointed representative and who were working together on this whole rapidly accumulating HDC residential development/MCC golf course at the time? He most arguably was, and certainly considering that shortly after buying the Dallas Estate in perhaps mid-October, he optioned it to HDC to purchase.
And then on Nov 10, 1910 HDC made their initial offer to MCC with a listing of app. five separate properties (some that were specifically listed as assigned by their sellers to “buyers in blank” (in real estate parlance this is filled in at the “buyer section” of contracts and deeds as “Buyer and/or assignees” totaling 338.6 acres of which 117 acres (without a completely defined border in only one section-----eg the northern section of the Johnson Farm, known as “the top of the L.”
This we know from a depiction of the 117 acres for the golf course that we have come to refer to as “The Nov. 1910 Land Plan.”
On that Nov. 1910 Land Plan was the depiction of an “approximate” road (yet to be built) that seemed to define the western boundary for the new golf course on “the top of the L” of the old Johnson Farm.
I contend that if one factors in all the Johnson Farm land below Ardmore Ave and includes with it the 20-21 acre Dallas Estate and then factors out all the old Johnson Farm land above Ardmore Ave to the west of the old Johnson Farm western border on “The top of the L” (which includes that block north of Ardmore Ave across from #2 green and that interesting swath just above Ardmore Ave which I estimate to be app. 23-25 acres and then factor out all the land to the west of that “approximate” road and to the east of the old Johnson farm boundary at “the top of the L” on the Nov 1910 Land Plan which I estimate to be just a bit more than 20 acres (20-22) you will come up with app 117 acres!!
You try doing the measurements and the math---eg I just did and I did it previously on here over a year ago. And I contend that the actual Francis’ land swap idea and fix never came within six months of that Nov. 15, 1910 Land Plan! I reiterate that all the supplementary and supporting Merion administrative records suggest that Francis idea happened around the end of March or beginning of April 1911.